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Patients get on average just 10 minutes allocated with their doctor and that is frankly just not enough time to ask detailed questions about your health condition, even if you could organise your thoughts when faced by the white coat.

Most people are too scared to make appointments with healthcare providers simply to find out more about their condition, how to best manage it or find out the latest news and information about it.

You can spend hours and scare yourself stupid randomly browsing the internet and uncover some dubious information from less than authoritative sources, or get sucked in by snake oil salesmen who prey on your fear and lack of expert knowledge to sell you poetess, ineffective, potentially dangerous and usually expensive "cures."

So where do you got for reliable information, the latest health news, articles and conversations with experts and other people with the same conditions you are interested in?

Half term is looming and I am faced with the prospect of a whole week with all of the children at home, almost certainly stuck indoors given the current monsoon conditions in my neck of the woods.

I know, I could pull on wellies and raincoats and go for a nice healthy (damp) yomp round the woods with them. But if you were even thinking of suggesting that you obviously have never met me in real life. I am that woman who doesn't much like walking even on the sunniest of days. The words "a", "Nice" and "walk" should never ever be put together in my opinion.

At a push I might load them into the car and take them to the local museum but on rainy days, especially in school holidays it is always rammed with soggy toddlers and harassed mothers with steamed up glasses and their best Joyce Grenfell voices on. "George. Don't do that." (Go google Joyce Grenfell if you have no clue what I'm talking about!)

My husband gets a distinctly panicked look when he sees me hunting for paint brushes. When I get the urge for a change I have been known to drastically alter colour schemes while he is at work and upcycle furniture in what I call "shabby chic style" and what he calls "painting things white or grey badly."

I first embraced the vintage chic look long before you couldn't move in gift shops for dangling woden and tin hearts and before antique shops realised if they painted old stuff in chalk paint and scattered it amongst the real antiques they would make more money.

My house is filled with now what I consider interesting things mostly in a granny chic style embracing a number of decades. I have a couple of Georgian chairs I love, some Victorian tat, and some 30's 40's and 50's bits and pieces. Complementing all of that I have some modern pieces upcycled in creams, greys and pastels.

I have a confession though. Up until now I have mostly used tester pot…